X-Git-Url: http://gitweb.michael.orlitzky.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Fman1%2Fhath.1;h=3b245589da85d2280a617a006a6b862fb2172b30;hb=d31bf1f13b60a813d61be616c825e324bac049a1;hp=6e7a618c61adbaaf7ac2cf9ccd0abb85dec56264;hpb=e8454fd0eb8af01dbba627ed707a7a45103daf3d;p=hath.git diff --git a/doc/man1/hath.1 b/doc/man1/hath.1 index 6e7a618..3b24558 100644 --- a/doc/man1/hath.1 +++ b/doc/man1/hath.1 @@ -4,12 +4,12 @@ hath \- Manipulate network blocks in CIDR notation .SH SYNOPSIS -\fBhath\fR [\fBregexed|reduced|duped|diffed\fR] [\fB\-h\fR] [\fB-i \fIFILE\fR] \fI\fR +\fBhath\fR [\fBregexed|reduced|duped|diffed|listed|reversed\fR] [\fB\-hb\fR] \fI\fR .SH INPUT .P -The \fIinput\fR (default: stdin) should be a list of CIDR blocks, -separated by whitespace. Empty lines will be ignored, but otherwise, -malformed entries will cause an error to be displayed. +The \fIinput\fR (stdin) should be a list of CIDR blocks, separated by +whitespace. Empty lines will be ignored, but otherwise, malformed +entries will cause an error to be displayed. .SH DESCRIPTION .P Hath is a Haskell program for working with network blocks in CIDR @@ -28,8 +28,8 @@ List them. .IP \(bu Find their associated PTR records. .P -Hath does just that. It takes as its input (via stdin, or a file with -the -i parameter) a list of CIDR blocks. +Hath does just that. It takes as its input (via stdin) a list of CIDR +blocks. .SH MODES .P Hath has several modes: @@ -40,9 +40,8 @@ This computes a (Perl-compatible) regular expression matching the input CIDR blocks. It's the default mode of operation. .P .nf -.I $ hath <<< \(dq10.0.0.0/24 10.0.1.0/24\(dq -([^\.0-9](10)\.(0)\.(0)\.(0)[^\.0-9]|[^\.0-9](10)\.(0)\.(1) -\.(0)[^\.0-9]) +.I $ hath <<< \(dq10.0.0.0/29 10.0.0.8/29\(dq +((10)\.(0)\.(0)\.(0|1|2|3|4|5|6|7|8|9|10|11|12|13|14|15)) .fi .IP \(bu 2 \fBReduced\fR @@ -121,13 +120,37 @@ runtime on the command line; for example, the following will perform 198.41.0.6: rs.internic.net. \(pc\(pc\(pc .fi -.P -Each of the modes also supports a present-tense flavor; the following -are equivalent to their counterparts: \fBregex\fR, \fBreduce\fR, -\fBdupe\fR, \fBdiff\fR, \fBlist\fR, \fBreverse\fR. .SH OPTIONS -.IP \fB\-\-input\fR,\ \fB\-i\fR -Specify the input file containing a list of CIDRs, rather than using -stdin (the default). +.IP \fB\-\-barriers\fR,\ \fB\-b\fR +(regexed mode only) place barriers in front/back of the regex to +prevent e.g. '127.0.0.1' from matching '127.0.0.100'. The downside is +that the resulting regexp will match something that is not an IP +address, and this messes up e.g. \fIgrep -o\fR. + +.P +Without \fB\-\-barriers\fR, you can match things you shouldn't: + +.nf +.I $ echo \(dq127.0.0.100\(dq | grep -P $(hath <<< \(dq127.0.0.1/32\(dq) +127.0.0.100 +.fi + +.P +Using \fB\-\-barriers\fR can prevent this: + +.nf +.I $ echo \(dq127.0.0.100\(dq | grep -P $(hath -b <<< \(dq127.0.0.1/32\(dq) +.I $ echo $? +1 +.fi + +.P +But, this may also cause the regex to match something that isn't an IP +address: + +.nf +.I $ echo \(dqx127.0.0.1x\(dq | grep -Po $(hath -b <<< \(dq127.0.0.1/32\(dq) +x127.0.0.1x +.fi